Richard Saltoun will present a collection of radical concrete
typewriter poems from the 1970s by influential Anglo - French sound and performance artist Henri Chopin.
Not exact matches
Get The Look: Bag and cardholder by ShafferLA (similar style here and here), SPF by Kate Somerville, Ring and Bangle by Wanderlust and Co, Caftan by Theodora & Callum (similar style here), Lip Gloss by Elizabeth Arden, Sunglasses by AQC, Pressed Juicery in Vanilla Almond, Chasers of the Light:
Poems from the
Typewriter Series by Tyler Knott Gregson
It's a fascinating story, well - told by Nichol, and I think California
Typewriter is enjoyable and worthwhile viewing for most anyone, even those who have never sampled the tactile pleasures of banging out an article, story, poem, or note on a trusty t
Typewriter is enjoyable and worthwhile viewing for most anyone, even those who have never sampled the tactile pleasures of banging out an article, story,
poem, or note on a trusty
typewritertypewriter.
The poet, for much of the 20th century, would have written the
poem out by hand, then typed it up on a
typewriter, which would be submitted to the publisher, who typesets it; which exact spacing, say, of an indent, reflects the real authorial intent — the first draft, the copy, or the finished book?
Maybe one day I'll go through the exercise of typing in all those
poems (used a
typewriter in those days), and then format them into something I can give away on Amazon.
«I who make mistakes on the eternal
typewriter», a quote from a
poem by beat poet Allen Ginsberg, leaves room for various visual stories.
Working into the night in his monestary cloisters, he created a stream of visual
poems on his portable Olivetti
typewriter, combining conscious and unconscious word association with heavily condensed characters and overlapping key strokes.
The role of the language in his practice is also examined, through the display of
poems and
typewriter works.
The exhibition also includes
poems illuminated by Philip Guston and Alasdair Gray,
typewriter works by outsider artist Christopher Knowles and a set of etchings by David Hockney inspired by Greek poet CP Cavafy.